Cheney is an anomaly in vice presidential role

JERUSALEM (AP) - Old joke: Did you hear the one about the parents who had two sons? One went off to sea. The other became vice president, and neither was ever heard from again.

Modern joke: When Dick Cheney is in the hospital, George W. Bush is just a heartbeat away from the presidency.

The way people poke fun at the vice president today says a lot about how Cheney has retooled the job.

Some argue that Cheney is too powerful, but the very fact that people are debating the issue is evidence of how much has changed from the days of Daniel Webster, who, when offered the vice presidency, quipped, "I don't propose to be buried until I'm dead."

Cheney himself isn't sure whether future vice presidents will be as hands-on as he's been.

"I'm reluctant to say it's a trend," Cheney told reporters during an interview Monday in Israel. "If you look at the history of the office, it can go either way."

With no contract or job description for the vice president, Cheney said it will depend on the wishes of future presidents. He said Bush "wanted me to sign on as a member of the team, somebody who would be an active participant in the governing process, and he's kept his word."

Known as a chief architect of the war in Iraq and a hard-liner when it comes to U.S. foreign policy, Cheney would be hard-pressed to win a popularity contest. His approval ratings are in the mid-30s. But he does not judge his effectiveness by the polls.

"If I wanted to be loved, I ought to be a TV correspondent, not a politician," he joked during an interview later in Turkey, his last stop on a 10-day trip throughout the Mideast.

Using his stature and long-standing personal relationships with many foreign leaders, Cheney has schmoozed with Arab leaders in oil-rich countries such as Oman and Saudi Arabia, bolstered support for Afghanistan's struggling government, nudged the Israelis and Palestinians to take steps toward peace and had a series of private talks with Iraqi politicians as the war enters its sixth year.

When it comes to Iraq, Cheney thinks the administration is possibly more relevant today than it was a year ago because Bush's military buildup has helped reduce violence. There is concern the bloodshed will return as the extra troops go back home between now and July, but for now, Cheney believes the drop in violence has bolstered the administration's leverage in Iraq.

"I don't feel any sense of loss of influence, if you will," Cheney said during his visit to Baghdad. "I think, if anything, the successes that we've demonstrated here have given us greater credibility than would have been the case if we hadn't had the surge and the progress of the last 12, 15 months."

Kevin Kellems, a communications strategist and former Cheney spokesman, said the vice president has a lot of authority on the world stage even as the administration's time runs out and the world's attention turns to the race for the next president.

"He's very aware of the power of his words in foreign countries," Kellems said. "His voice overseas is a big club to swing - it has enormous impact. So he carefully calibrates his message."

Kellems also doesn't buy the argument that Cheney's influence on Bush has waned, although he acknowledges that some of Cheney's closest allies are no longer in the administration - people such as former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, the vice president's former chief of staff, Lewis "Scooter" Libby, and former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations John Bolton.

"You could argue that some of his allies and or staff members have moved on to other things so therefore the dynamic within the administration has changed," Kellems said. "But I see no evidence that the president seeks or listens to his advice in the second term less than he did in the first."

Walter Mondale, President Jimmy Carter's vice president, was the first vice president to have an office in the West Wing. "That sort of helps integrate you with the operation," Cheney said.

Historians will study Cheney when he leaves to determine whether he has overreached his position.

Gerald Ford loathed being vice president in the Nixon White House.

"He just hated the job," Cheney said. "He always expressed to me the view that the worst nine months of his life were the ones he spent as vice president."

The job, though, suits Cheney, who has embraced his role as secretive, behind-the-scenes power broker. He even laughs at being likened to "Star Wars" villain Darth Vader.

Cheney's lack of presidential aspirations has been a unique aspect of his two-term vice presidency.

"People said this is a source of his strength. He doesn't have a different agenda from the president, but there's a flip side that I think is troubling," said Joel Goldstein, a law professor at Saint Louis University who has written extensively on the vice presidency. "A vice president who is not looking to succeed to the presidency is not politically accountable," he said.

"If he were running for president, he would have to be out there talking to a cross section of the American public," Goldstein said. "I'm very hopeful that both parties' presidential nominees will pick somebody presidential and give them the accessibility and responsibility that the nation's second officer ought to have."

Copyright 2008 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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